Surveillance for infectious myonecrosis virus in Indian shrimp aquaculture
518 / 134
Abstract
Disease surveillance programmes provide information on diseases that mitigate aquaculture production. Infectious myonecrosis virus (IMNV) has emerged recently as one of the OIE (Office International des Epizooties), the World Organisation for Animal Health listed viral diseases in penaeid shrimps, caused by dsRNA virus. The present study was conducted to investigate the prevalence of IMNV along the Indian coastal states. Samples of the Pacific whiteleg shrimp Penaeus vannamei and the green tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon were collected from 21 randomly selected active shrimp farms located along the coast using a risk-based two stage random sampling survey. Screening of the sampled shrimps based on nested RT-PCR diagnostic tool, did not detect IMNV in any of the samples examined indicating absence of IMN or IMNV incidence in shrimp aquaculture along Indian coastal states.
Downloads
Downloads
Submitted
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2017 Indian Journal of Fisheries

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The copyright of the articles published in Indian Journal of Fisheries vests with the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, who has the right to enter into any agreement with any organization in India or abroad engaged in reprography, photocopying, storage and dissemination of information contained in these journals. The Council has no objection in using the material, provided the information is being utilized for academic purpose but not for commercial use. Due credit line should be given to the ICAR where information will be utilized.